Skip to navigation
   
Simon Bisson & Mary Branscombe's Blog

Augmented Reality gets, well, real

By Simon Bisson & Mary Branscombe in Editorial

Posted in Android, Navigation, Applications, IBM, Mobile on June 22, 2009 at 12:28 pm

Permalink | Author Profile

Today is the first day of Wimbledon, and it’s also the release of IBM’s first consumer augmented reality application, Seer (for Android mobile devices).

Here’s Seer in action:

Augmented reality is one of the upcoming killer applications for mobile devices, where the built-in sensors mix with geocoded information to tell you just what you’re seeing - and at the same time give you more information about it. Seer’s an annotated window into the Wimbledon, using the device’s camera, built-in GPS, compass, and G-sensor. The combination of the four lets the software know where the phone is, and where it is pointing - and at what angle - at which point it overlays relevant information on the camera view of the world, in your own personal heads-up display.

What IBM is doing is an interesting example, as it links straight into IBM’s Wimbledon data feeds (and its Twitter stream!). It’s easy to see how this type of tool can be adapted to business applications. Plug Seer into a logistics feed, and you’ll be able to “see” just what’s in each package on a shop floor, or in each truck on a loading dock. Perhaps it’ll help your sales staff identify the products your customers are using, or give estate agents a new tool for annotating houses.

Seer’s not the only AR application out there. I’ve been playing with a shiny new HTC Magic for a few weeks now, the G-2 Android phone in the guise of a Google ION developer device, and as part of my explorations I’ve been looking for interesting applications in the Android Market. That’s where I found one of the nicest pieces of mobile software I’ve seen - Google Sky Map.

It’s not surprising that Google has done such a good job with this software, after all, Android is their phone platform, and they should know it (and the reference hardware inside out). The folk in Mountain View also have a huge database of data they can take advantage of - in the shape of Google Earth and all its varied information layers. Where Sky Map differs from most computer based star maps is that it’s live.It then calculates the current view, and displays it. Google is augmenting reality, making it part of its world of search.

On a deeper level it’s actually a specialised version of what Mary calls a “What’s-That”, a device that when pointed at something, well, just does that. It annotates the world with an overlay of information to give us the information we want and need. Phones don’t have the power needed to deliver that level of image recognition, but they do know where you are. Constrain the problem to maps of the heavens, and you’ve got a winner on your hands.

The sky at night can be confusing - with light pollution and high cloud making identification hard. Just being able to point a phone in the right direction to get the names of the objects you can see is an excellent solution to the problem. After all, it’s the most personal of devices and one that’s going to be with us when we most need it.

Then there’s Wikitude, which is a step even further in the direction of the What’s-That, using the device camera and the device sensors to overlay points of interest from geo-coded data in Wikipedia and Qype on the phone screen.

Here it is, letting me know what’s in the world outside a hotel room somewhere in Oregon. There’s still not enough data in the world of public geo-coded information - but what there is is enough to make you want more.

You know, I really like living in the future.

(I’ll go into all the hassles involved in screen-capping Android another time!)

–Simon

12345
Not yet rated
Loading ... Loading ...

Previous Post | Next Post

 
 
Comments

Pingback by Twitter Trackbacks for IT PRO: Blogs: Simon Bisson & Mary Branscombe: Augmented Reality gets, well, real [itpro.co.uk] on Topsy.com - September 1, 2009 on 11:29 pm

[…] IT PRO: Blogs: Simon Bisson & Mary Branscombe: Augmented Reality gets, well, real www.itpro.co.uk/blogs/maryb/2009/06/22/augmented-reality-gets-well-real – view page – cached , Today is the first day of Wimbledon, and it’s also the release of IBM’s first consumer augmented reality application, Seer (for Android mobile — From the page […]

Make a comment

* required

* required

We stop spam using reCaptcha.
Type the words below and click Submit Comment.

   
Tag cloud

acquisitions data loss Intel Facebook CIO Xen Trend Micro Google IO mobile ofcom network RSA 2008 mobile fingerprint utility data todo list Linux forensics ucsd g-2 ruggedized RIM Previous Versions browser .NET Reqall gabriola Ask.com migration pixetell ipsec IBM hold music Google ANR xT9 mythbusters Wimbledon spam Vodafone security theatre community MAX geneva information rights management Numenta performance bolt streaming media anti-virus windows 7 data loss prevention geotagging semiotics Eee PC Large Hadron Collider RAZR QWERTY voice Acrobat Pro greenplum merger legislation bug power saving design MRDA IT transformation Jeff Jones old software mobile working teched SSD NAS database mobile broadband consolidation Gears routing oracle Sony business model LiveID user interface hibernation business continuity mobile network Express Gate icons market share SapphireSteel HTML 5 ec2 nvision08 macro enterprise netbooks backhaul identity theft no signal ikea cloud computing lawsuit wave dual boot bea future in review Xobni display Mini-Note 2.0 anti-patterns eu malware enterprise architecture Silverlight VSSAdmin natural interface Istanbul identity metasystem mobile data tariffs Mark Hurd screen fingerprint scanner wes IDF AskEraser electricity price DSL Dopplr bombe OpenID switch catalyst culture Fire Eagle setup IT policy GPS control panel MacWorld 2008 DLP O'Reilly congestion charge ipv6 uninstall drivers security vmware CES designer goview video BES rich client politics CardSpace sun relocation battery life service oriented enterprise flash accelerator Ruby On Rails radeon Magny-Cours mysql UMPC co-processor meaning thermo beta test NVIDIA RSS search wireless USB target Windows Mobile Palladium power supply Tom Hogan history london camera wubi robot 64-bit CTO cloud utilities virtual desktop mainframe disk bletchley park pre-boot developer tele atlas Opsware hardware docking station colossus evernote user experience Windows Server 2008 voice recognition conferences ontier information high performance computing ubuntu LHC upgrade mscape parallel computing licensing how do I get the back off? adfs EMC twitter Frauenhofer SP1 Beacon Web 2.0 advertising windows offload hacking trends HP police MING clean install Vista keyboard applications CUDA Volume Shadow Copy Bing multiple monitors mobile Linux FUD images codec cracking WWW netiquette smartphone d2c mms 2009 Credentica MWC accessories DisplayLink CERN Live Mesh geocaching Enterprise 2.0 bbc iplayer hp microsoft research citrix cosmic rays international roaming disaster recovery augmented reality aws disk space web 2.0 expo HSDPA gaming usb dvi social engineering Smartbook g-1 Protected View phone management power cuts it pro winhec2008 Asus application compatibility yahoo AuthenTec iPass Mozilla rtm Opera connectivity Trampoline server futura training Mono ClipMate distributed computing business interoperability Girl Geek Dinners troubleshooting exchange numbers context cloud service google online applications installation verdana benchmark BitLocker firewall search WEI whitelist i-mate HMT annotation case monitor visualisation macbook atom telecoms project bandwidth support installer GPU turing Ray Ozzie Tripit venture capital MIX Dell phone settings netbook ADFS 2.0 timezones information cards ports p2v data centre emulator management Lenovo ballmerbot mobility NexT RIA Qualcomm secure biometrics Java CPU data tariff hierarchical temporal memory web productivity privacy Windows Server Palm identitity server sprawl Clear RX EEE Tim Berners-Lee appstore Crossfader Treo Pro WinHEC bugs griffin outlook Mercury TechEd 2008 networks media HTC hyper-v transcoding Tablet Kiosk Salesforce fonts tablet conference ultraportable open Tablet PC Ruby geek tourism anti-trust instant messaging Jeff Hawkins fault android deperimeterization public cloud Gartner IO T-Mobile development navteq october terabytes Trolltech Adobe cables navigation 3G Apple Internet Explorer 8 fire screencam Netscan cisco iPhone T9 Loki downturn remove back pgp wifi regulation people claims Delphi Greasemoneky office 2010 processors patent machine learning network workflow Chrome IT automation magic Firefox direct access BBC flash drive calit2 OQO MacBook Air 2009 office politics infrastructure AIR open source vulnerabilities laptop ATI office pen computing Opteron software BlackBerry beta Pal Itanium amazon html flex Seagate credit crunch DOS cellcrypt fibre demo09 collaboration business technology automation gamer 965 Windows Live virtualisation green IT task bar christmas ribbon business technology optimisation optical interconnects thin client Safari BT isps webkit apps TSA Microsoft OFCOM Verbatim Moonlight Secunia traffic active digitiser Netscape SKU toshiba Skyfire storage moscow Nuance safend IIW2008b HSPA exabytes private cloud education logitech appzero lost server windows server 2008 r2 Quest microsoft research cam IT value competition Barracuda Hugh Thompson city SBS Motorola Toshiba Portege R500 hard drive amherst MIX08 virus moblin system center OEM Windows 7 vs Windows Vista power insert SIM national museum of computing dual display business intelligence GPL NGSCB legacy email Embarcadero lockdown social networking maps microsoft security essentials Bill Cheswick Active Directory analytics Internet Explorer desktop. PC tennis gameboard RBL Nokia AMD Internet web2expo rc Location media center Corsair quiz O2 Google Spreadsheets spam fighting mapping Visual Studio green printing innovation encryption etech Hp 2710p ProCurve hdmi Bill Gates data centre transformation mash-up isp patch Tuesday Google Sets demo IM Tombstone Objects DOSBox regulations SMB 2 wildfire Wyse M&A cold fusion system management WPF security paradox TouchSmart deborah adler
Advertisement
Advertisement